"I love her like no other. Let me write her a poem. Oh Elizabeth, Oh my love, how much I love you, and how I would be sad without you. You are my sunshine, you are my moon, and you are my twinkling stars. "

Originally posted by unbellaco "I love her like no other. Let me write her a poem. Oh Elizabeth, Oh my love, how much I love you, and how I would be sad without you. You are my sunshine, you are my moon, and you are my twinkling stars. "

Apple Computer, Inc.'s Internet suite of products with a common look and feel, offering
easy drag-and-drop control across different Internet services, as well as tight integration
with the Mac OS and Macintosh OpenDoc-compliant applications. Cyberdog's browser, mail reader,
Internet address notebook and news reading components are completely integrated with one common interface to accomplish Internet tasks. Cyberdog's integration with the Mac OS and Macintosh applications embeds Internet resources throughout the user's work, making Internet connectivity an extension of the desktop.

I laughed so hard at 1:45 in the morning that I woke my wife up! I was crying I laughed so histerically.

Did you look at his quicktime VR? What is that computer to the right of his desk. Kinda a cool office for 1996, at least makes me wonder what they have these days in their offices? Multiple 23" cinema displays, etc.

Also the OS8 flag in his window is kinda funny. Ok not really, but kind reminicient of a different time for mac users.

Originally posted by MacHack Apple Computer, Inc.'s Internet suite of products with a common look and feel, offering easy drag-and-drop control across different Internet services, as well as tight integration with the Mac OS and Macintosh OpenDoc-compliant applications. Cyberdog's browser, mail reader, Internet address notebook and news reading components are completely integrated with one common interface to accomplish Internet tasks. Cyberdog's integration with the Mac OS and Macintosh applications embeds Internet resources throughout the user's work, making Internet connectivity an extension of the desktop.

What the heck is this?

Click to expand...

No, it's nothing like .Mac. It was a browser that was part of a project called OpenDoc. OpenDoc developers would write "parts" that could be combined into a single application using drag and drop. It was unbelievably progressive. There is nothing like it now. While some have argued that VisualBasic is somewhat similar (in that modules can be combined into a single app by developers), the truth is that they are nothing alike.

For example, you could drag and drop together a word processing app that can also e-mail and edit photos. While this might sounds useless to some, the idea was revolutionary--allowing users to decide what features to include in the software they use.

I'm not sure why it failed, but there was a lot of talk at the time about copyrght issues. Imagine M$ tolerating someone actually adding useful features to Word--or taking them away. I think the idea was maybe a bit too far from the way everyone else used computers to be acceptable.

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